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Rustic Purple Bread

Easy and beautiful loaf of bread made with purple yam. Crunchy and chewy on the outside and super moist on the inside. An fairly easy bread to make to impress anyone at the dinner table, and the best bread to wipe and clean off any sauces on the plates.
Keyword Bread
Cook Time 50 minutes

Equipment

  • stand mixer

Ingredients

  • 400 g all purpose flour (3 cups of all purpose flour)
  • 310 g Luke warm water (307ml of Luke warm water)
  • 160 g steamed and cooked purple yam (3/4 cup of cooked purple yam)
  • 10 g sea salt (1 1/2 tsp sea salt)
  • 2 g instant yeast (1/2 tsp instant yeast)

Instructions

  • Wash and peel the purple yam. Put it in your steamer and steam for about 20 minutes until soft. Test it by poking it with a fork. If it goes in without effort it is done. If it requires force, then give it another 5-10 minutes.
  • In a stand mixer, attach the dough hook. Add the flour and water together and combine until a light crumble appears. Put a towel or plastic wrap over the top and let it rest for 30 minutes. This allow the flour to fully hydrate.
  • Meanwhile, put the fork in another bowl and mash it. Make sure all the big clumps are broken into smaller pieces. Don't worry if its not smooth, once it is in the stand mixer, it will break and smooth everything together. I sometimes like small chunks showing and are in the dough, so when it is baked, you can also see the purple yam pieces in the bread.
  • Remove the towel or plastic wrap from the bowl, and add the mashed purple yam, sea salt, and instant yeast. Adjust speed to medium low for 20 minutes. The dough afterwards will look sticky and very elastic like. Let it sit for 3 hours until it has tripled in size.
  • Dust the clean counter top with some flour, and carefully remove the dough on to the table. Gently deflate the dough, and give the dough the fold and stretch method. You're going to take the sides of the dough (imagine the dough is a face and you're going to pull the two ears of the face) stretch it out, and fold it where the nose is (the centre of the dough). Don't over stretch where you see the dough is tearing. Now you're going to take the top and bottom (top of the head and the chin of the face) and fold it again to the centre of the dough (the nose). Do this 3 times. Now flip it outside down (now the face is slapped onto the counter top) seaside down, and roll the dough around. You need to put some pressure at the bottom of the dough and pull the dough at the centre. You're going to feel some pressure and stretching of the dough (its honestly the best feeling when I do this part), and you're going to do this a few times until the dough becomes a beautiful ball. Do this 3 times.
  • Now you need to find a vessel to put the dough in the fridge. If you have a bread proofing basket - use it. If not, just a regular bowl but find one that fits the dough but also some space for it to grow slightly. Add a piece of parchment paper and pat it down to the shape of the bowl. Gently flour the bowl and place the dough seaside down (wrinkly face down). Put plastic wrap at the top of the bowl and let it sit in the fridge overnight: at least 12 hours.
  • When you're ready to bake, preheat oven to 475F/245C with the rack at the lower third. Insert the dutch oven with the lid on while it preheats. When the oven reaches the desire temperature, let the dutch oven sit there for an additional 20 minutes.
  • Gently lift the dough out of the bowl by lifting on the sides of the parchment paper, and place it on the counter top. Place another new parchment paper beside the dough, and gently flip the dough on to the new parchment paper. The seaside should be facing up now.
    The goal here is to preserve and not disturb the air gas that can been developing in the fridge for 12 hours. the Less movement we can create when we place the dough into the oven, the better gas bubbles you'll get when you bake the bread. When the dough has been sitting in the fridge, all the gas built up is at the bottom of the dough which is the seaside is located. When we flip the bread upside down, the gas is invertiley at the top, so when we bake it at a high temperature, it will expand and get the beautiful air bubbles in the bread.
  • Carefully take the dutch oven out, and carefully by lifting the parchment paper place the dough inside the oven with the lid on top. Bake for 20 minutes.
  • After the first 20 minutes finished, lift the lid off and bake for an additional 30 minutes.
  • Lift the bread out and let it cool completely on a drying rack. You need complete air circulation around the bread, including the bottom. Let the bread cool off completely before indulging.

Notes

You can easily add seeds and grains to the top of the bread easily by placing the desire seed and grain to the proofing basket before you add the dough inside.